Introduction to Electricity
Introduction
Electricity has become an important part of our lives. Life without electricity is so hard to imagine. It can be easily converted into other forms of energy and transmitted over long distances in minimum energy loss. From lightning in a room to agriculture, communication and media to medical field, transport to computers, almost every field depends heavily on electricity. That's why it has become perhaps the most important branch of science and engineering.Electrostatics and Current Electricity
For the better understanding of this form of energy, it is divided into electrostatics and current electricity. The study of electric charges at rest and their cause and effect constitutes electrostatics.
The study of causes and effect of moving charges is called current electricity.
Electrification
A Greek philosopher and scientist named 'Thale' rubbed a substance made of amber with fur cloth and noticed that both these materials started attracting small bodies like thread, pieces of paper, etc. Hence, amber and fur were considered to have acquired electrical property and process was called was called electrification (amber was called 'electron' in Greek language).
When a body is rubbed with another body transfer of electrons from atoms of one body to that of the other body takes place. Electrons are negatively charged subatomic(found in the atom) particles, While rubbing, one body loses electrons and the other body gains the same number of electrons that are lost by first body, An atom is electrically neutral as it has the same number of electrons and protons, When some electrons are lost by the first body, it now becomes negatively charged because of presence of more electrons than protons while the other body becomes positively charged due to loss of electrons.
This process of transfer of electrons or charges from one body to another is called electrification or charging.
'Charge' is defined as the amount of electricity present in a body. It is denoted by 'Q' or 'q'. The unit off electric charge in S.I. system is 'coulomb' named after the scientist Coulumb. It is denoted by 'C'.
This process of transfer of electrons or charges from one body to another is called electrification or charging.
Charges and properties of charges
Properties of charges
The following are the properties of charges.
1. There are two types of charges, viz., positive and negative.
2. Like charges repel and unlike charges attract each other.
3.On losing electrons, a neutral body acquires a positive charge.
4. On gaining electrons, a neutral body acquires a negative charge.
5. The amount of charge present in a body, either positive or negative, is expressed in terms of an integral number of the charge of an electron, which is considered the elementary entity of an electric charge.
6. The magnitude of charge of an electron is equal to the magnitude of a proton.
7. The charge on a body gives the information about the excess or deficiency of the total charge, either positive or negative, present in the body.
8. When no charge is supplied to or removed from a body, it is said to be electrically neutral and then the amount of positive charge present in it is equal to the amount of negative charge present in it.
Methods of charging a body
The process of supplying an electric charge to a body is known as 'charging'. A body can be charged in different ways.
Charging by Friction
When a glass rod is rubbed with a silk cloth as shown in the fig., the glass rod loses some electrons and becomes positively charged whereas the silk cloth gains the electrons lost by the glass rod and becomes negatively charged. This method of charging two bodies by rubbing them is called charging by friction.
Charging by conduction
The method of charging a body as shown in the fig. is called charging by conduction.
Charging by Induction
In the induction process, a charged object is brought near but not touched to a neutral conducting object. The presence of a charged object near a neutral conductor will force (or induce) electrons within the conductor to move.
Detection and Presence of Charges
An electroscope is a scientific instrument used to detect the presence and magnitude of electric charge on a body. It was the first electrical measuring instrument. ... Electroscopes detect electric charge by the motion of a test object due to the Coulomb electrostatic force.
It consists of a vertical metal rod, usually brass, from the end of which hang two parallel strips of thin flexible gold leaf. A disk or ball terminal is attached to the top of the rod, where the charge to be tested is applied.[9] To protect the gold leaves from drafts of air they are enclosed in a glass bottle, usually open at the bottom and mounted over a conductive base. Often there are grounded metal plates or foil strips in the bottle flanking the gold leaves on either side. These are a safety measure; if an excessive charge is applied to the delicate gold leaves, they will touch the grounding plates and discharge before tearing. They also capture charge leaking through the air that accumulate on the glass walls, and that increase the sensitivity of the instrument. In the precision instruments the inside of the bottle was occasionally evacuated, to prevent the charge on the terminal from leaking off through the ionization of the air.
When the metal terminal is touched with a charged object, the gold leaves spread apart in a 'V'. This is because some of the charge on the object is conducted through the terminal and metal rod to the leaves.[9] Since they receive the same sign charge they repel each other and thus diverge. If the terminal is grounded by touching it with a finger, the charge is transferred through the human body into the earth and the gold leaves close together.
The electroscope can also be charged without touching it to a charged object, by electrostatic induction. If a charged object is brought near the electroscope terminal, the leaves also diverge, because the electric field of the object causes charges in the electroscope rod to separate the leaves. Charges of the opposite polarity to the charged object are attracted to the terminal, while charges with the same polarity are repelled to the leaves, causing them to spread. If the electroscope terminal is grounded while the charged object is nearby, by touching it momentarily with a finger, the same polarity charges in the leaves drain away to ground, leaving the electroscope with a net charge of opposite polarity to the object. The leaves close because the charge is all concentrated at the terminal end. When the charged object is moved away, the charge at the terminal spreads into the leaves, causing them to spread apart again.
THIS WAS ALL ABOUT STATIC ELECTRICITY...
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